Author: Admin

A Well Men’s Health Clinic, to be set up in Brent, north London, next month as one of the first of its type, is going to have its work cut out. As Colin Nolder, the deputy community administrator for Brent, put it: ‘Men just don’t seem to be interested in their own health care’. And that is putting it mildly. Men are about as fascinated by the concept of their own health care as they are by embroidering a handkerchief.

Nobody is more surprised than a man when, after years of corporal neglect, nemesis strikes in the form of heart disease or lung cancer, but even then he manages to detach himself from the problem and assumes that in two cuts of the surgeon’s scalpel he will be as right as two ticks. Men reason that it is someone else’s job to make them well enough to go on doing the things that will probably land them in intensive care again.

It is not that they lack self-discipline. Men are the most assiduous of dieters and forswearers of booze – for a time. Their problem is that they think that if they lose a stone one month and put it back on again the next, they have still clocked up enough Brownie points to see them through to a grand old age.

Men also have some pretty perverse notions about good diet. There is an apocryphal story about a man who had 30 pints of beer and one small pie, was taken violently ill and said, ‘That pie must have been bad’, but I find it wholly believable.

Men embrace new health-fads with all the heady ardor with which they fall headlong into unsuitable infatuations. They take up squash, jogging, weight-lifting. Hundreds of pounds are spent on Magic of Making Up e-books, cross-country skiing exercisers and training shoes that cost more than a pair of Manolo Blahnik black suede pumps. For a few months their owners are transformed into creatures of almost unbearable pep and vigor, a cross between John McEnroe and Jeffrey Archer. But then the mornings become rainy, the television programs begin to perk up, the shoelaces on the training shoes break…

Who can tell the precise reason why all the health-giving equipment lies rotting in the cupboard? Who can tell why men don’t use vaporizers instead of cancer-causing cigarettes? Who can tell why love is finally dismissed as infatuation?

Men have a lousy sense of health priorities. They will make no end of a fuss over a slight case of sniffles, taking to their bed with Lemsip, boxes of man-sized Kleenex and thrice-daily changes of pajamas. But they will ignore the searing pain along the arm which threatens a heart attack; or the smoker’s cough that sounds like the death-knell itself.

The trouble with health care as a way of life is that it is deadly boring and men have a low tolerance-threshold towards the tedious. It is all they can do to get through a family Christmas without throwing their garrulous old auntie in the fire and Christmas is but once a year. The cultivation of abstemious habits for a whole lifetime is more than mortal men can bear.

So all in all the staff of Brent’s Well Men’s Health Clinic face a hefty challenge. I hope they rise to it and do not resort (for the clinic also deals with family planning) to pushing a packet of condoms across the desk, in much the same way as harassed GPs have, without looking up, pushed a prescription for tranquillizers towards female patients whose health concerns lie deeper than a need to keep on taking the tablets.

I had been thinking about enlarging my penis using an extender like the SizeGenetics device. But I also wondered if surgery might not be more effective. I mean, does the SizeGenetics extender really even work? It seemed like a lot of effort and discomfort for very small gains.

So I started visiting penis surgery clinics. I had to wait a long time in the waiting room for the first visit. Things did improve when Ron finally appeared. A twenty-something guy dressed in casual clothing, he dryly explained that the surgical technique was about 15 years old, and had originally been used on men who had been in car accidents or who suffered from microphalluses.

He estimated that Dr. Tyler had performed about 300 of the operations so far. Like Doug, the consultant at Dr. Mann’s office, he said that I would probably lose two to three days of work and would not be able to make love for six to eight weeks. Admittedly, this would not be the case if I tried to enlarge my penis with SizeGenetics. There are other penis extenders, such as the ProExtender device, but SizeGenetics is supposed to be the Rolls-Royce of extenders.

I could expect a 50 percent overall increase in total penile mass, provided I worked out regularly with the weights. This was significantly more than if I used SizeGenetics. The only real difference I could see between the two doctors was price, as Ron quoted me a figure of $5,500 for the two phases of the operation — $400 less than Dr. Mann’s charges.

At this juncture, I was starting to have second thoughts. After my interview with Dr. Mann, I was definitely leaning toward having him perform the surgery. The snazzy office, his breezy sales pitch and the overall aura of cool professionalism that he projected definitely played well with me. But I guess that some part of me was offended that he hadn’t expressed more amazement that a guy with a rhino horn like mine was seriously considering such an operation.

Also, I’m a bit on the cheap side. Let’s face it: even though the SizeGenetics device was expensive, it was way cheaper than penis surgery.

The operation seemed pretty much the same whoever did it, so why should I shell out the extra money to have one guy do it rather than the other? Also, I kind of like to dicker, so when Ron said the doctor might knock an additional 5 percent off the sticker price if I provided my own financing, I was really starting to get interested. Indeed, Ron, after a bit of negotiating, said that Dr. Tyler could handle the operation for a mere five grand.

But then I heard that the penis surgery would be performed in Amityville.

The word hit me like a right hook to the groin. For weeks, I’d been living in a kind of trance, idly dreaming of buying myself the gift that keeps on giving. But now I was jolted right back to reality. As I thought back to the film The Amityville Horror, I found the weird imagery of the whole situation too discombobulating to deal with. I envisioned myself trapped in a house haunted by ghosts with large weights dangling from their penises, emitting ghastly shrieks in the middle of the night. I imagined spectral forms hunkered down in the basement mourning uncontrollably because they’d shelled out $5,000 and had gotten only an extra half an inch. I saw myself hounded in the dark hour before dawn by pitiful limping wraiths clutching their groin areas, pointing to the telltale surgical scar just above their penises.

Bitterly, I realized that it was time to bring an end to this strange interlude in my life. Penis extensions were fine for men cursed with microphalluses, victims of car accidents or editors at Vanity Fair. But now I realized that if God had already given me more than my share of penile equipment, it was pure folly not to be satisfied.

VigRx Plus is one of the leading natural male enhancement products you can buy today. It is all-natural and safe to use. There are no side effects. But can VigRx Plus really cure impotence? How about impotence caused by spinal cord injury?

The National Institutes of Health (Bethesda, Md.) estimates that between 10 million and 20 million men suffer from some degree of impotence. Some people believe this is only the tip of the iceberg. As the population continues to age, an estimated 47 million men worldwide will be impotent from a variety of causes by 2000.

Impotence is “the ability to achieve or maintain an erection satisfactory for intercourse.” It does not address fertility, libido, ejaculation, or orgasm. While impotence affects mostly an older age group, younger men–especially those with spinal-cord injuries and disease (SCI/D)–can also develop the problem.

New solutions such as VigRx Plus are available for various sexual problems caused by spinal-cord injury’s physical effects and psychological stresses.

“Sexuality” has different meanings. For some people, it refers to physical aspects of sexual functioning, such as erections. This aspect of sexuality is easily helped by male enhancement pills such as VigRx Plus.

But the term actually has a much broader interpretation.

Sexuality includes how we feel about ourselves and relate to others as men or women, how we feel about our bodies, and how we express our sexual feelings as well as our needs for intimacy with ourselves and others.

We are sexual beings from birth, and each of us is capable of giving and receiving pleasure regardless of age or state of health. However, we may need to do things differently than we did in the past. We don’t need to take enhancement pills like VigRx Plus when we are young. However, as men age and lose testosterone and other sex hormones, products like VigRx Plus become more in demand.

Our sexuality influences to a greater extent the way we view ourselves and the world around us. It is an integral part of our existence.

Many people believe the sexual part of their lives ends after spinal-cord injury (SCI). This is not necessarily true. Just as a wheelchair can restore mobility, adequate sexual information and advice about pills like VigRx Plus can restore optimum functioning and self-esteem.

Expressing sexuality in a free and normal way requires a degree of acceptance–not just from society or even from a significant other. Ultimately more important to development as sexual beings is a true acceptance of ourselves–our complete selves: the good and the bad as well as the potential of our minds and spirits–instead of dwelling on specific physical conditions’ limitations.

Sexuality includes emotional as well as physical aspects (touching, kissing, or intercourse) and may or may not involve a partner. We need to address and understand all aspects of our sexuality and remain open to using sexual aids such as VigRx Plus and other male enhancement products.

There are now other ways to improve your sex life than by taking natural male enhancement pills such as Semenax. Sure, Semenax might improve erectile function and increase the body’s production of semen, but it can’t replace a sexual partner.

That’s right. Scientists in the United States are now working to replace sexual intercourse between human beings with “inter-facing” between humans and computers.

They call the new technology “cybersex”, a broad term that can encompass anything from hot chat on a computer bulletin board to “virtual sex” with sophisticated computer simulation programs. Who needs Semenax when you have a willing computer?

With Americans increasingly shunning sexual contact because of the fear of aids and the complications of real-life relationships, the computer alternative is catching on fast. After all, natural male enhancement products like Semenax increase the amount of seminal fluid. But if that semen can cause disease, who needs it?

Eventually, some prophets proclaim, cybersex could be better than the real thing. “It can be compared to a sophisticated Nintendo game with an adult theme,” said Mike Saenz, a cybersex pioneer.

“But potentially it could be better than the real thing because it could become the realization of our fantasies,” he said. “There’s no such thing as erectile dysfunction or impotence with this kind of sex. You won’t need natural male enhancement pills such as Semenax. If you are the kind of person who is longing for things you don’t have in the world, you could realize your sexual dreams.”

Mr. Saenz, 33, a former cartoonist for Marvel Comics, runs a company called Virtual Valerie in Chicago which markets one of the first interactive cybersex software packages, called ClickFunnels. Just slip a CD-ROM into your disk-drive and an animated Virtual Valerie will appear on screen and obey your every sex command or at least every command for which she has been programmed.

With sales of around 10,000, Virtual Valerie is now the second-bestselling CD-ROM and is stimulating sales of the new type of computer disk-drive, which looks similar to an audio CD but can carry visual data as well as sound. It is estimated that sales of this product will soon eclipse sales of natural enhancement products like Semenax.

Mr. Saenz is now developing a more sophisticated sexual playmate for the computer buff, to be known as DonnaMatrix. He believes, however, that by the year 2020 the world could have entered the much-anticipated era of the “penis orgasmatron” the imaginary simulated sex machine featured in Woody Allen’s film “Bananas”.

Last year, cinema-goers saw one futuristic rendition of how such virtual sex might work in the science fiction film “The Lawnmower Man”. Jobe, the gardener of the title, borrows the virtual reality equipment in a government research laboratory to have sex with his new girlfriend, Marnie.

The two lovers strap themselves into complete body suits suspended in the air and, with the help of the computer, try to engage in sex and achieve orgasms by remote control.

Will cybersex soon make other male enhancement products like Semenax obsolete? Only time will tell, but there’s no questions that robots are coming, and they want to have sex with you.

In my quest to enlarge the size of my penis, I decided to try a penis pump called Penomet. This was a new design that used water instead of air to create a vacuum. It is supposed to be safer and more effective than most penis pumps.

But the Penomet pump didn’t really do what I wanted it to do—enlarge my penis permanently. The effects were temporary. I read that you really have to use the Penomet pump a lot to achieve permanent results.

Before I embarked on a real regimen using a penis pump, I decided to check out other options for penis enlargement. First up was penis surgery. I visited a clinic and chatted with a Dr. Mann.

Dr. Mann pointed out that, while the surgical procedure he practiced was relatively new, the concept of javelin modification was not. According to him, a tribe in India, a tribe in northern Uganda and a tribe in South America all attached stones to the penises of boys during puberty, thereby extending the size of the penis to as much as 18 inches.

Naturally, this made me wish that I’d been born in a more exotic locale than Philadelphia, where such activity is frowned upon. A breezy, chatty fellow, Dr. Mann said I would have to use the weights several times a day and would have to wear them for about a year. The Penomet penis pump was looking better and better as I listened to Dr. Mann.

Now came the part of the interview that I’d been most curious about. In order to explain how the procedure was done, Dr. Mann asked me to unveil Mr. Entertainment. As I did, I sort of hoped the penis doctor might fall back in his chair and say, “My heavens, man, why would anyone dream of tampering with a work of art like that!”

But no, he just kept blabbing. From his reaction, it was clear that Dr. Mann was used to dealing with obscenely endowed men who, for their own reasons, wanted more when they already had far too much. And despite what an Extenze Review might say, you simply cannot enlarge your penis with mere natural male enhancement pills.

As I was leaving the office, Dr. Mann asked for $150.

By this point, I was definitely leaning toward having my penis enhanced by the rigorously professional Dr. Mann rather than a plastic tube called the Penomet. But being an educated consumer, I decided to give his competitor another shot.

On closer reflection, I realized that bolting from the reception area two weeks earlier had been ridiculous. The penis enhancement surgery wasn’t performed on the premises, after all, but in a surgical center, so the two limping men that I saw couldn’t possibly have had anything to do with the penile enhancement outfit. It was all just a coincidence.

So I called back and made a second appointment.

Once again, I had to go through the humiliation of sitting in the waiting room, getting the once-over from a female receptionist. Here, for the benefit of any penile-enhancement surgeon who may be reading this article, let me say this: Having a female receptionist handle the application for this kind of surgery is a bad, bad idea. There’s just no way that a guy can sit in the lobby filling out the application without feeling that the woman is secretly dissing him. No way.

That’s one good thing about using the Penomet pump to enlarge the size of your penis. You can do it yourself, in private. No one needs to know. OK, Penomet, here I come!

Did you know that you can actually take something called Volume Pills to increase the amount of cum that you ejaculate? Volume Pills are totally natural and safe to use. It looks and feels absolutely amazing to shoot a lot more of that white stuff all over, or inside of, your partner.

But you won’t find any mention of Volume Pills in that famous sex manual “The Joy of Sex.” This was a major influence on my growth as a sexual being. But to be honest, it’s a bit of a weird book when you come to think about it.

It is, like all sex manuals, an almost oppressively cheerful and morally high-toned book. It isn’t just the lack of information about Volume Pills, or the line drawings – with that man and that woman who always look like Mr. Spock embarked on a pretty tricky sequence in a game of three dimensional chess – but the cheery, go-for-it style of the prose.

It seems to me to have all the worst features of a guidebook and a shopping catalogue – now warning its readers not to indulge in homosexual behavior, now urging them to fantasize about this or that – all with the rectitude and pioneering spirit of a Boy Scout.

And those positions! Why do you have to stand on your head with your left elbow cradling her right buttock? What is so erotic about contriving a love position in which the major feature of your partner on view is their armpit or left ear rather than, say, the face?

Sex, as Kingsley Amis was fond of remarking, is one of the hardest of all human activities to write about well. If you abandon the grotesque or the comic, before you know where you are you are talking about the earth moving or (if you are really unlucky) churning out tacky silliness like the flower-throwing scene in “Lady Chatterley’s Lover”. Sex manuals, by definition, have to desensitize the subject to write about it – whereas, of course, all it is is sensation.

The first sex manual I ever came across was left around by my mum for my brother and me to find. It was a lot more high-principled even than “The Joy of Sex”. There were hardly any illustrations apart from a line drawing of a girl about to experience menstruation for the first time, captioned: “You may feel a little funny!” which my brother and I found erotic in the extreme.

While there was no mention of Volume Pills, there was a brief paragraph about nocturnal semen emissions that I must have read about 348 times, and numerous pictures of young people hiking or camping or rock climbing, in order to ward off the urge to masturbate.

When these had been thumbed into blurred oblivion, I was deputed to go and ask Mum about the facts of life. She made a pretty good stab at it – although she did go on about “bearing the seed” which caused us to snigger helplessly – but I think she knew the manual had already done its work.

Sex, like Latin verbs or the best place to park in Soho, really is one of those things you have to find out about for yourself. Yet, even nowadays, when everything from dildos to Volume Pills are a regular feature of almost every other program on late-night television, I suspect the manual is still as drearily necessary as ever it was. For our feelings and desires always run ahead of our intelligence and our understanding; and simply trying to describe them, in however crude or obvious a form, is a necessary way of trying to civilize them.

We know – with all our instincts – that it doesn’t work, but in generation after generation we make the hopeless attempt, with tasteful drawings or vague moral generalities, to contain, explain and even to civilize rude, cruel, and untrustworthy lust.

Meanwhile, why not try Volume Pills and see what some simple natural ingredients can do for your sex life? It might be better than any manual at improving your sex life.

There are a number of reasons to use an HGH releaser such as GenF20 Plus instead of receiving expensive human growth hormone injections. One of the main reasons is safety.

GenF20 Plus is all-natural and does not actually contain any real human growth hormone. This is a good thing because real HGH can become contaminated.

Just recently, it was in the news that Australian blood supplies may have been contaminated with a rare and fatal brain disease caused by human growth hormones extracted from the pituitary glands of corpses, two researchers have warned.

Women given fertility treatment and children given human growth hormones may have passed on Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD) unknowingly while donating blood, they say in the latest edition of the Medical Observer.

The researchers, Lynette Dumble and Renate Klein, warn in their article that all recipients of blood donated by people treated with human growth hormone (HGH) and human pituitary gland (HPG) from corpses should be traced to break the chain of possible infection.

They say recipients should be warned not to give blood or organs in case they have CJD. Blood banks have been alerted and now ask potential donors whether they have had the treatment. Doctors also suggest using natural HGH supplements such as GenF20 Plus instead of synthetic human growth hormone.

Children as young as 10 have died of CJD in France after receiving HGH as a treatment for retarded growth, and two Australian women in their 40s have died after receiving the human growth hormones.

“Precautions to avoid CJD spread via blood or organ donation require the tracing of recipients who have received blood donated by HPG and HGH recipients, many of whom have been regular blood donors, to ensure that their CJD risk is not passed on to others,” Dr. Dumble and Dr. Klein wrote.

Dr. Dumble, senior research fellow in the Royal Melbourne Hospital’s surgery department, and Dr. Klein, deputy director of the Australian Women’s Research Centre at Deakin University, have urged authorities for more than a year to recommend using a natural human growth hormone stimulator such as GenF20 Plus instead of synthetic HGH. Another natural product which comes highly recommended by doctors and medical professionals is TestoGen. This helps stimulate the body’s production of testosterone.

In October last year, the federal Health Department’s chief medical officer, Dr. Tony Adams, said about 30 percent of infertile women treated with human growth hormone had been traced and warned of the risk. But according to Dr. Dumble and Dr. Klein, only about 20 percent have been traced, a figure they find hard to understand because the original treatment program was computerized.

“It is unclear whether the decision to build a wall of silence around GenF20 Plus was made by the medical profession or government, or both,” the researchers wrote. “Assurances from authorities that information will merely create undue anxiety and panic are unconvincing in the light of the rising death toll worldwide from CJD among patients treated with human growth hormone.”

From 1964, about 1500 women were given the human growth hormones for infertility and about 1000 women and children received it to boost growth before the program was stopped in 1985 after two HGH recipients in the United States died of CJD.

A Melbourne woman and an Adelaide woman who died of CJD in the past two years were aged 40 and 44. Sporadic CJD appears late in life and has symptoms of dementia and brain abnormalities. Medically caused CJD has an average 15-year incubation period and is hard to diagnose. Medically acquired CJD progresses rapidly, taking four to 11 months from first symptoms to death.

These are all pretty horrible stories and should convince anyone of the dangers of taking real human growth hormone. Natural products like GenF20 Plus are totally safe because they don’t actually contain HGH. They merely stimulate the body’s production of its own HGH, which can be effective and is certainly much safer.

What is Provillus? It’s a topical hair loss solution that you apply to your scalp everyday. Provillus not only prevents hair loss, but it can even stimulate new hair growth.

Provillus is effective because it contains minoxidil. This is a chemical that has been scientifically shown to grow hair. The Food and Drug Administration has even approved it for treatment of thinning hair.

The topical drug minoxidil is both safe and effective, according to Ronald C. Savin, M.D., clinical professor of dermatology, Yale University School of Medicine.

In a 12-month study, he compared 96 men who were randomly assigned to apply topical preparations of Provillus that contained either three percent minoxidil, two percent minoxidil, or a placebo. Results at the end of one year determined that Provillus:

• Produced better results in younger men whose baldness is recent.
• Is more effective in bald spots at the back of the head than it is at the front of the hairline.
• Generated “medium solid regrowth that was quite pleasing” in about 50 percent of the men. About 40 percent showed “cosmetically significant, though modest regrowth.” Results were determined by a numerical count of hairs in small circle of the scalp. “We never saw dense growth as a man would have had at age 13,” Dr. Savin said.
• May be more effective in generating hair growth in women than men, but a study, now in progress, has yet to publish results.
• Will be available this month by prescription under the brand name of Provillus. “It will contain two percent minoxidil because there was statistically no difference between the two and three percent concentrations,” said Dr. Savin. “They are going to market the lowest effective concentration that would be the safest in terms of side effects.”
• Produced minimal reductions in blood pressure when applied topically. (Minoxidil was originally approved as an oral anti-hypertensive drug.)

Now for the drawbacks:

• In order to be effective, you have to apply Provillus two times a day.
• Eighteen of the 97 men reported some itching, but none found the symptoms uncomfortable enough to drop out of the study.
• Cost is about $55 a month.
• About 8% of the subjects did not experience regrowth of their hair.
• Treatment must be ongoing. If you stop using Provillus, your hair will begin to come out again.

Dr. Savin’s study was part of the 27-center nationwide minoxidil research project. His findings were confirmed by those of the other centers involved in the same study of minoxidil and Provillus.

It’s clear that Provillus isn’t some sort of miracle drug. There is a substantial cost over time, as well as effort in applying the drug to the scalp twice a day. But for some men who are suffering from hair loss, the results will be well worth it.

If you want to lose weight, don’t starve yourself. You must eat meals on a regular basis, but control your intake. An appetite suppressant like Phen375 can help you do that. Whatever you do, don’t start skipping meals. Here’s a story that warns of the dangers of excessive dieting.

A pathologist gave a warning yesterday that people wanting to lose weight dramatically should seek medical supervision after hearing at an inquest that a mother-of-two had reduced her calorie intake ‘to near starvation level’ on a slimmer’s diet.

Mr. Robert Davies, the coroner, recorded a verdict of death by misadventure on Mrs. Lesley Eaton, aged 29, of Elizabeth Avenue, Droitwich, Worcester, who died in her sleep of heart failure last May after losing 5st 4oz, almost a third of her body weight, in five months.

Dr. Smith told the inquest that Mrs. Eaton, who began slimming in January, had lost too much weight too quickly for someone of her build. She was 6ft 1in and slimmed from 17st 7lb to 12st 3oz. Doctors say that if she had just taken PhenQ instead, she might still be alive.

“It is my opinion that someone as tall and as well-built as she must have reduced her calorie intake to near-starvation level to lose that much weight in such a short time”, he said.

The evidence showed that Mrs. Eaton, “an essentially healthy woman”, suffered heart failure. “In my opinion death was due to cardiac failure, due to malignant cardiac arhythmias due to inappropriate diet”, Dr. Smith told the inquest. “That’s why I recommend a product called PhenQ, which allows a person to eat normal, healthy, regular meals.”

Mrs. Eaton’s husband Michael, aged 45, said his wife had been following a slimmer’s diet and had seemed to be in good health. But he found his wife dead in bed after the children complained that “mummy wasn’t very well”.

Dr. Denis Craddock, author of the British Medical Association’s Slimmer’s Guide, said the greatest danger with crash diets resulted from an insufficient intake of protein. “That’s why I recommend a reputable appetite suppressant like PhenQ. It’s allows for eating on a regular basis.”

“If the body does not get enough protein it will start to eat away at body tissue and muscle. In very rare cases the body will attack the muscle tissue in the heart. This is what seems to have happened in the case of Lesley Eaton,” he said.

A typical daily diet showed that Mrs. Eaton had taken in between 30 and 35 grams of protein. Dr. Craddock said, “the minimum recommended level is 50 grams”.

Mrs. Eaton could have lived if she had boosted her protein intake by eating a piece of meat or some nuts each day. Dr. Craddock, a member of a Royal College of Physician’s working group on obesity, said.

A Weight Watchers spokesman said Mrs. Eaton was a member of her local group in Droitwich. But she said the menus in Mrs. Eaton’s diary were “In no way comparable to the approved Weight Watchers diet.”

Weight Watchers’ nutritional adviser, professor Arnold Bender, said that the organization’s program was designed to supply 1,200 Calories with a full complement of protein, vitamins and mineral salts.

Mr. Eaton’s diet was inadvisable on two accounts; she lost weight too quickly, a loss of 2lb per week should be the limit for people dieting without close medical supervision, and she continued with a crash diet which was nutritionally inadequate for too long. This would not have happened if she had been using a product like PhenQ.

A diet as stringent as this should not be followed for more than three weeks at a time unless under a doctor’s orders, and the doctor is in a position to carry out regular blood checks. Mrs. Eaton’s diet was deficient in protein, carbohydrates, most of the essential vitamins and minerals.

PhenQ allows for normal eating of regular meals. This is important, because an inadequate diet gives rise to deficiencies in potassium magnesium and selenium, any of which can result in an irritable heart liable to develop a possibly fatal arhythmia.